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A simple CLI for BioNetGen

BNG CLI build status Open in Remote - Containers Documentation Status

This is a simple CLI and a library for BioNetGen modelling language. PyBioNetGen also includes a heavily updated version of Atomizer which allows for conversion of models written in Systems Biology Markup Language (SBML) into BioNetGen language (BNGL) format.

Please see the documentation to learn how to use PyBioNetGen.

Installation

You will need both python (3.7 and above) and perl installed. Once both are available you can use the following pip command to install the package

$ pip install bionetgen

Features

PyBioNetGen comes with a command line interface (CLI), based on cement framework, as well as a functional library that can be imported. The CLI can be used to run BNGL models, generate Jupyter notebooks and do rudimentary plotting.

The library side provides a simple BNGL model runner as well as a model object that can be manipulated and used to get libRoadRunner simulators for the model.

PyBioNetGen also includes a heavily updated version of Atomizer which allows for conversion of SBML models into BNGL format. Atomizer can also be used to automatically try to infer the internal structure of SBML species during the conversion, see here for more information. Please note that this version of Atomizer is the main supported version and the version distributed with BioNetGen will eventually be deprecated.

The model object requires a system call to BioNetGen so the initialization can be relatively costly, in case you would like to use it for parallel applications, use the libRoadRunner simulator instead, unless you are doing NFSim simulations.

Usage

Sample CLI usage

$ bionetgen -h # help on every subcommand
$ bionetgen run -h # help on run subcommand
$ bionetgen run -i mymodel.bngl -o output_folder # this runs the model in output_folder

Sample library usage

import bionetgen 

ret = bionetgen.run("/path/to/mymodel.bngl", out="/path/to/output/folder")
# out keyword is optional, if not given, 
# generated files will be deleted after running
res = ret.results['mymodel']
# res will be a numpy record array of your gdat results

model = bionetgen.bngmodel("/path/to/mymodel.bngl")
# model will be a python object that contains all model information
print(model.parameters) # this will print only the parameter block in BNGL format
print(model) # this will print the entire BNGL
model.parameters.k = 1 # setting parameter k to 1
with open("new_model.bngl", "w") as f:
    f.write(str(model)) # writes the changed model to new_model file

# this will give you a libRoadRunner instance of the model
librr_sim = model.setup_simulator()

You can find more tutorials here.

Environment Setup

The following demonstrates setting up and working with a development environment:

### create a virtualenv for development

$ make virtualenv

$ source env/bin/activate


### run bionetgen cli application

$ bionetgen --help


### run pytest / coverage

$ make test

Docker

Included is a basic Dockerfile for building and distributing BioNetGen CLI, and can be built with the included make helper:

$ make docker

$ docker run -it bionetgen --help

Publishing to PyPI

You can use make dist command to make the distribution and push to PyPI with

python -m twine upload dist/*

You'll need to have a PyPI API token created, see here for more information.